"Congress to lawyers: Don't take away our BlackBerrys. Please.
In a rare intervention into a private lawsuit, the chief administrator of the House of Representatives yesterday pleaded with attorneys in a patent-infringement case to settle their differences in a way that allows the popular handheld e-mailing device to continue operating.
'The device is used routinely by most members of Congress . . . as well as senior staff,' wrote James M. Eagen III. Any disruption in the service 'creates a serious risk to the House's critical communications and could jeopardize the public interest, particularly in the event of an emergency,' he said.
Eagen wrote that Congress has invested nearly $6 million in BlackBerry technology, including issuing 3,000 of the black, wireless handsets, in part because of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
Eagen's worry stems from a federal court jury verdict in November that the BlackBerry infringed on patents held by NTP Inc., an Arlington holding company." [The Washington Post, via Boing Boing Blog]